Firefox 4’s public release has now been pencilled in for a March 22nd launch, a little later than first hoped. The fourth iteration of Mozilla’s gecko-powered browser was originally meant to be a 2010 release, and then following further delays a February 2011 launch was hoped.
Posting in a Mozilla Development discussion on Google Groups, Damon Sicore commented on the positive reception that met the first release candidatet, adding that now was the “time to make a decision to ship”.
Sicore went on to add that both Mozilla’s “IT and Marketing (departments) have indicated that March 22nd is an acceptable final launch date.”
But the March 22nd date could well change if developers currently testing the release candidate come across any major issues or serious bugs, as detailed by Sicore: “If at any time we discover issues that would block final release, we would issue an RC2 as soon as possible, reset the ship date, and communicate to everyone.”
Firefox 4 introduces several changes, including tabs now being placed above the address bar, mutli-touch support, a new add-ons managers, improved HTML 5 support and more. Unlike the recently released Internet Explorer 9, Firefox 4 will work on Windows XP.
You can give the release candidate of Firefox 4 a try here ahead of its final release later this month. Let us know your thoughts on Firefox 4 in the comments – what browser do you use?
[Via The Register]
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